Olfaction, also known as
olfactics, is the
sense of smell. This sense is mediated by specialized sensory cells of the nasal cavity of vertebrates, which can be considered analogous to sensory cells of the antennae of invertebrates. In humans, olfaction occurs when odorant molecules bind to specific sites on the
olfactory receptors. These receptors are used to detect the presence of smell. They come together at the
glomerulus, a structure which transmits signals to the olfactory bulb (a brain structure directly above the nasal cavity and below the frontal lobe). Many vertebrates, including most mammals and reptiles, have two distinct olfactory systems—the main olfactory system, and the accessory olfactory system (used mainly to detect pheromones). For air-breathing animals, the main olfactory system detects volatile chemicals, and the accessory olfactory system detects fluid-phase chemicals. Olfaction, along with
taste, is a form of
chemoreception. The chemicals themselves that activate the olfactory system, in general at very low concentrations, are called
odorants. Although taste and smell are separate sensory systems in land animals, water-dwelling organisms often have one chemical sense.